Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 April 1939 — Page 25
THURSDAY, APRIL 6, Vandy on
Hill Today For Tribe
Reds’ Ace Agrees to Pitch Part of Louisville Encounter.
Times Special BARTOW, Fla. April 6.—The Indianapolis Redskins were back in their own league today and were booked to tackle the Louisville Colonels on the local diamond. It's the next-to-the-last Grapefruit circuit game for the Indians
939
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and they are anxious to hand Ownie Bush's team a second drubbing. In| a previous clash on March 26, at!
Arcadia, the Louisville camp, the |
Hoosiers won, 15 to 7 Baseball fans in this territory | were expected to show some real en- | thusiasm today. Johnny (Double No-Hit) Vander Meer, the Cincin-|
nati Red's ace southpaw, agreed to}
pitch part of the game for the Indians. Vandy has been recuperating from a siege of illness while practicing with the Hoosiers and apparently has rounded into form. At any rate, he said he felt strong and volunteered to pitch. Johnny will rejoin the Reds at| Durham, N. club will stop on its barnstorming; trip to the North.
Florida Finale Tomorrow
The Columbus Red Birds will come to Bartow tomorrow to meet the Indians and it will be the Tribe's finale in the citrus belt. The | Schalkmen will break camp Satur-| day, say farewell to their many]
friends here and shove off for Chat- “
tanooga to play the Southern Asso-| ciation Lookouts in a three-game series. The Indians’ Grapefruit League standing shows nine games won and | four lost. The fourth setback occurred at Lake Wales yesterday where the Montreal Rovals have a whale of a team. It was the second time Burleigh | Grimes’ boys upset the Tribe and it was a 5-to-0 shutout. The score in| their first game, staged at Bartow, was 6 to 3. In the fracas vesterday the Redskins reminded Manager Schalk of | last year's club. The athletes got | 11 hits and no runs. They put run-! ners on the sacks and left ‘em stranded for the want of a base hit in the clutch.
Offday In Field
Moreover, the Tribesters had an offday in the field and committed Jour miscues while the Royals plaved errorless ball. The International Leaguers got to Lioyd Johnson in the first inning for one run. A double, walk and an error filled the bases and a single | shoved across a marker. A Tribe double play pulled the southpaw out | of the hole. In the third a double. a walk and a wild throw to center field by Catcher Ray Thomas accounted for! a second Montreal tally. After one! down in the fifth the Royals filled | the sacks on a single and two free tickets and a single by Ross scored two runs. Once again a double killing helped Johnson. Milton Galatzer, Tribe right field- | er, had a good day at bat by collect- | ing three of his team’s 11 hits inj four times up. Montreal registered a fifth marker] : in the sixth to end the runmaking for the day. Porter and Wicker shared the mound honors in handing the Indians nine large goose eggs. Seven Hits, Five Runs
The winners tallied their five runs on seven hits. which is super production. Bases on balls and! errors aided them materially in chalking up an easy victorv. It was the first time the Redskins failed to score in 13 starts. | Yesterday's box score: INDIANAPOLIS AB
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Indianapolis ............. 000 000 Montreal . . 101 021
Two-base hi ts—Moser. Stein. Three-base hit—Johnson. Stolen bases—Moser. Deal. Double plars—Thomas to Latshaw; Vaughn to Sorensen to Latshaw: Moser to Feil: Loane to Vaughn: K Lewis to Sorensen. | Sankey to Bell to Hasson 2. L on | bases—Indianapolis, 11: Montreal. 6. on balls—Off Johnson. 5: Porter. 1: er, 2. Strikeouts—By Porter, 'H 1 ts—Off Porter. 4 in 5 innings: Wick- | er. 7 in 4. Winning pitcher—Porter al pires—Peters and Fenton. Time—1:5
Purdue Battles to Second Tie in South
Times Special JACKSON. Miss, April 6. —Purdue| University's baseball team was to play Millsaps College here today! after winning one and piaying to two ties in 2 three-game series with | Louisiana Tech at Ruston. Yesterdays Purdue- Louisiana | Tech game was called at the end of | the ninth with the count deadlocked | at 1 to 1. Purdue's marker came in the fifth on a home run by! Pitcher John Emmeret.
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{1939 Open
That's Tribe Pitcher Jimmy Sharp, left, with ; Crackers. The cameraman caught the boys “building while soaking up a lot of sunshine at the
C., Sunday where the his face rimmed in a big grapefruit. They are going | Indianapolis Indians’ spring training camp at Bar-
Balas is taking it a little easier.
about getting the juice a la natural like native
A La Natural in , Grapefruit League
Pitcher Mike | health”
tow, Fla.
|
Local Bowlers Threaten High State Tourney Mark
Indications today were that the 3040 score which is “tops” now in the state bowling tournament, in progress on week-ends at Pritchett’s Alleys, will take a terrific bombarding Sunday night. Some of the teams which will get their try at the “pot of goig> Sun-| jo an Ror Cl lI Press day gave the pins a g “going | Job "Fulton, ndianapolis ... over” last night in the Indianapo- | Ki \\eSholt: Tndianapetis o...:: lis League at Pritchett’s drives and | Baker, Chevrolet Cesar ras vehi seanes any one of several Spears fo Ye, Carl Hardin, indianapois 111 1 s | capable of eclipsing the present top jor Nee indica oo111: BE : |S Arch Heiss, Indianapolis |" Barbasol headed the quintets last Paul Stemm, Indianapolis fare ‘night with 3183 and Russet Cafe-| Manuel Schonecker, Indianapolis teria was runnerup with 3093. Falls, ok dian apolis Coil ata Creve [City Beer banged out 3063, Ajax Bob Kelley, Uptown Beer made 3061, Marott scored 3052, erry Brother? "Link Beit Chaser made 2993, L. S. Ayres hit| yi. ‘Samroek, Link-Belt 92980 and Herff-Jones got 2979. La Ei) Brunet, Indiana olis Fendrich rolled 2853. E Ganlema, Posto fice es All of these teams and several| Emil Elder, Uptown others of the same caliber will see aoa action on the last shift of squads COLLEGE BASEBALL Sunday at 8:15 p. m. STATE COLLEGES The highest solo SCOre of the eve-| Indian at Wanaeh. rained out o> 1 ning was contributed by Ed Strie- Print OTHER COLLEGES ‘beck of the Ajax Beer team, who| Navy, 11; Vermont, . * |added games of 243, 228 and 225 for| Qhie University. 5: Newberry, 6. ' 16096. Another Indianapolis Leaguer na, 6; Nebraska) oe followed with 687. Pierson showed LOCAL TRACK RESULTS games of 176, 253 and 258 for his Tech, 8%; Bloomin fon. 31. YE. second-place score. Washing’ on, 6313; Southport, 502;. Chris Rassmussen finished third i lon the list, which was “top heavy” with Indianapolis loop games. He registered 684. Nearly four-fifths
of the list was composed of bowlers
in the Indianapolis division. $i Up to $300 on
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GOLF
By TOM OCHILTREE
AND me that driver, son.”
Mark you the clearness of that command and its latent tragedy. For this is the season of the year when the faithful followers of Scotch | hockey march off from their wives, friends and business associates to battle again with hooks, slices and cuppy lies.
The parade already has started
courses and the stragglers in this,
jarmy are busy cleaning last fails ‘mud off of their spiked shoes. It] fought to be a great season, and no |
matter how bad the round was, re- |
member the fun you are going to | ‘have redoing it over in your mind | jat home and giving par a mental] beating. = ” ARLY records show that the Scotch inventors of this game used to spell it variously as golf, ! goff, gowif or gowf. Even now you hear a person pronounce it “guff. It was the same old game. though, | and the only thing the spelling’ proves is that these Highlanders {would have made terrible rewrite ‘men. Probably the Scot's reputation for | dourness comes from this game. What is dourness after all but the | way you feel and act when you are {two down at the turn?
A S an indication of the growth |
of the game, the U. S. Golf
| Association today
locations last
= # #
Perseverance Rewarded
EST “comeback” hole of the new season was reported by Chuck! Garringer, Speedway pro. this week, H. S. for 10 holes at Speedway without
‘making a par and then birdied No. 11, which is a 585-yard heart-break-
announced that] sectional qualifying rounds for the] championship will be held at 32 places. This compares {with 31 qualifying | year and two, an Eastern and West- | ‘erm center, 15 years ago.
Earlier | (Dan) Boone went’
on the City’s 13 private and public
er. He was playing with John Nickel, Virgil Campbell and Charles Brockman.
{the Lyric Theater bill, was out at Speedw ay vesterday in the rain. | “When I'm hitting my irons it It takes a tornado plus an earthquake {to keep me away,” he declared as he ‘took one for a ride. 5 2 2
HERE always has been consid-
Gil Lamb, currently appearing on;
Dan Abbott, Indianapelis cesabbesen 663 | Herschel Stilwell, In ianapolis © OVERCOATS © SHOTGUNS, ete.
Smith. Indianapolis
Fonnie Snyder, Indiana olis INJECTOR RAZOR 306-10 INDIANA AVE.
Fred Mounts, Indianapolis .....ooevvnn 612 Joe Michaelis, Indianapolis 638 Stewart Smith, Uptown s Charles Cray. Indianapolis Paul Field, Tedianape is
Newcomers Here for Derby i fs im
William Bowen, anapols Leo Ahearn, Indianapolis
J
Special Matches Planned;
Hoosier Team in Lead. a GENUINE
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Fuzzy Pierce and Georgia Gor-
don of the Cincinnati roller derby | team will appear on the Indian- |
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Men everywhere swear by the SCHICK INJECTOR RAZOR
erable debate on the length of |
| time it takes to learn this game. The | pros contend that if you start out right it is a comparatively easy,
process, but you can find plenty of | people any Saturday afternoon to |argue against that theory. Russell Stonehouse, South Grove's | {genial teacher, cites a good case for 'his side. Mrs. Alex Gordon, wife of |4 ‘the railway brotherhood official, has | taken only 12 lessons since last July | 29 but she recently shot a 44 over a {difficult nine at Miami. On her fourth game, as a matter of fact, {she went the full eighteen in 110.
= ® =
HO is this fellow Bogey that seems to be so unpopular? His | state wasn’t always such. In the early days of the game before they | put numbers on mashies and midirons each course had an imaginary { player known as Col. Bogey whose { score for each hole was fixed and accepted as sound golf and against whom the whole field played by match play. Since the Colonel was the forerunner of the more exacting par, apparently it was quite an honor ‘then to get a bogey on a hole.
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